Home and Garden
Gertrude Jekyll (1843–1932), the distinguished and influential garden designer of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, originally trained as an artist but later turned her hand to craftwork, gardening, and plant collecting and breeding. During her career she collaborated with distinguished architects such as Sir Edwin Lutyens and reached a popular audience through the publication of articles in newspapers and magazines such as William Robinson's The Garden. Jekyll's second book, first published in 1890, is a collection of her advice and reflections on a range of topics, particularly those relating to her own home, Munstead Wood. It contains chapters on particular plants, and gives guidance on projects such as building rock gardens, as well as more idiosyncratic pieces on her cats, or the importance of one's own tools. Jekyll's informal tone and the range of topics discussed make this a fascinating work of social and gardening history.
Product details
December 2011Paperback
9781108037204
404 pages
216 × 140 × 23 mm
0.51kg
46 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. How the house was built
- 2. A wood ramble in April
- 3. A garden of wall-flowers
- 4. Trees and lanes
- 5. Wild honeysuckle
- 6. Brier roses
- 7. Midsummer
- 8. Roses and lilies
- 9. Large rock-gardens
- 10. Small rock-gardens
- 11. The workshop
- 12. The kinship of common tools
- 13. Cut flowers
- 14. Conservatories
- 15. The making of pot-pourri
- 16. Plants for poor soil
- 17. Gardening for short tenancies
- 18. Some names of plants
- 19. Wild ferns
- 20. The kitchen garden
- 21. The home pussies
- 22. Things worth doing
- 23. Life in the hut
- Index.